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Young has 7 Pro Bowls to Warner's 3, although he'll probably get a 4th this year. Young has 2 league MVP's and has likewise won 1 Super Bowl and an SB MVP. Young's record as a starter is 94-49, 91-33 if you discount his tenure with those horrible Bucs team. Warner's record is 48-37.

Young has about 7000 more yards than him passing plus over 4200 yards rushing and 43 rushing TD's and his passer rating is above Warner's.

Young deserves to be in the HOF...so does Warner. Check his stats vs other top QB's.

Winning, of course, might be the No. 1 qualification for a quarterback to earn enshrinement in the Hall of Fame. Overall, Warner is 53-39 during the regular season as a starter. He is 5-2 in the postseason.

Of the 16 other quarterbacks to be selected as the Super Bowl MVP, 11 are in the Hall of Fame or will be: Bart Starr, Joe Namath, Len Dawson, Roger Staubach, Terry Bradshaw, Joe Montana, Steve Young, John Elway, Troy Aikman, Peyton Manning and Tom Brady.

Four Super Bowl MVPs did not make it in: Jim Plunkett, Phil Simms, Doug Williams and Mark Rypien.

One is too early to tell: Eli Manning.

Warner, at age 37, is in his 11th NFL season. He might not have many more seasons left to pad his numbers. But, for kicks, I looked up the career numbers for every Hall of Fame quarterback at profootballreference.com.

These are just the basic quarterbacks stat  touchdowns, interceptions, yards  to get a feel for where Warner stacks up. I listed the passers in reverse order of their year of enshrinement, since its more relevant to see how Warner compares to modern-era players than, say, Otto Graham and Bob Waterfield.